THE SCENARIO OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
Homo Rudolfensis: The Face Wrongly
Joined
The term Homo rudolfensis is the name given to a few fossil fragments
unearthed in 1972. The species supposedly represented by this fossil
was designated Homo rudolfensis because these fossil fragments were
found in the vicinity of Lake Rudolf in Kenya. Most of the paleoanthropologists
accept that these fossils do not belong to a distinct species, but
that the creature called Homo rudolfensis is in fact indistinguishable
from Homo habilis.
Richard Leakey, who unearthed the fossils, presented the skull
designated "KNM-ER 1470", which he said was 2.8 million years old,
as the greatest discovery in the history of anthropology. According
to Leakey, this creature, which had a small cranial capacity like
that of Australopithecus together with a face similar to that of
present-day humans, was the missing link between Australopithecus
and humans. Yet, after a short while, it was realised that the human-like
face of the KNM-ER 1470 skull, which frequently appeared on the
covers of scientific journals and popular science magazines was
the result of the incorrect assembly of the skull fragments, which
may have been deliberate. Professor Tim Bromage, who conducts studies
on human facial anatomy, brought this to light by the help of computer
simulations in 1992:
When it [KNM-ER 1470] was
first reconstructed, the face was fitted to the cranium in an
almost vertical position, much like the flat faces of modern humans.
But recent studies of anatomical relationships show that in life
the face must have jutted out considerably, creating an ape-like
aspect, rather like the faces of Australopithecus.75
The evolutionist paleoanthropologist J. E. Cronin states the following
on the matter:
...its relatively robustly
constructed face, flattish naso-alveolar clivus, (recalling australopithecine
dished faces), low maximum cranial width (on the temporals), strong
canine juga and large molars (as indicated by remaining roots)
are all relatively primitive traits which ally the specimen with
members of the taxon A. africanus.76
C. Loring Brace from Michigan University came
to the same conclusion. As a result of the analyses he conducted
on the jaw and tooth structure of skull 1470, he reported that "from
the size of the palate and the expansion of the area allotted to
molar roots, it would appear that ER 1470 retained a fully Australopithecus-sized
face and dentition."77
Professor Alan Walker, a paleoanthropologist
from Johns Hopkins University who has done as much research on KNM-ER
1470 as Leakey, maintains that this creature should not be classified
as a member of Homo-i.e., as a human species-but rather should be
placed in the Australopithecus genus.78
In summary, classifications like Homo habilis or Homo rudolfensis
which are presented as transitional links between the australopithecines
and Homo erectus are entirely imaginary. It has been confirmed by
many researchers today that these creatures are members of the Australopithecus
series. All of their anatomical features reveal that they are species
of ape.
This fact has been further established by two evolutionist anthropologists,
Bernard Wood and Mark Collard, whose research was published in 1999
in Science magazine. Wood and Collard explained that the Homo habilis
and Homo rudolfensis (Skull 1470) taxa are imaginary, and that the
fossils assigned to these categories should be attributed to the
genus Australopithecus:
More recently, fossil species have been assigned to Homo on the
basis of absolute brain size, inferences about language ability
and hand function, and retrodictions about their ability to fashion
stone tools. With only a few exceptions , the definition and use
of the genus within human evolution, and the demarcation of Homo,
have been treated as if they are unproblematic. But ... recent
data, fresh interpretations of the existing evidence, and the
limitations of the paleoanthropological record invalidate existing
criteria for attributing taxa to Homo.
...in practice fossil hominin species are assigned to Homo on
the basis of one or more out of four criteria. ... It is now evident,
however, that none of these criteria is satisfactory. The Cerebral
Rubicon is problematic because absolute cranial capacity is of
questionable biological significance. Likewise, there is compelling
evidence that language function cannot be reliably inferred from
the gross appearance of the brain, and that the language-related
parts of the brain are not as well localized as earlier studies
had implied...
...In other words, with
the hypodigms of H. habilis and H. rudolfensis assigned to it,
the genus Homo is not a good genus. Thus, H. habilis and H. rudolfensis
(or Homo habilis sensu lato for those who do not subscribe to
the taxonomic subdivision of "early Homo") should be removed from
Homo. The obvious taxonomic alternative, which is to transfer
one or both of the taxa to one of the existing early hominin genera,
is not without problems, but we recommend that, for the time being,
both H. Habilis and H. Rudolfensis should be transferred to the
genus Australopithecus.79
The conclusion of Wood and Collard corroborates the conclusion
we have maintained here:"Primitive human ancestors" do not exist
in history. Creatures that are alleged to be so are actually apes
that ought to be assigned to the genus Australopithecus. The fossil
record shows that there is no evolutionary link between these extinct
apes and Homo, i.e., human species that suddenly appears in the
fossil record.
Homo Erectus and Thereafter: Real Human Beings
According to the fanciful scheme suggested by evolutionists, the
internal evolution of the Homo genus is as follows: First Homo erectus,
then so-called "archaic" Homo sapiens and Neanderthal man (Homo
sapiens neanderthalensis), and finally, Cro-Magnon man (Homo sapiens
sapiens). However all these classifications are really only variations
and unique races in the human family. The difference between them
is no greater than the difference between an Inuit and an African
or a pygmy and a European.
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Homo erectus: An Ancient Human Race
 
Homo
erectus means "upright man". All the fossils included in
this species belong to particular human races. Since most
of the Homo erectus fossils do not have a common characteristic,
it is quite hard to define these men according to their
skulls. This is the reason why different evolutionist researchers
have made various classifications and designations. Above
left is seen a skull which was found in Koobi Fora, Africa
in 1975 which may generally define Homo erectus. Above right
is a skull, Homo ergaster KNM-ER 3733, which has the obscurities
in question.
The cranial capacities of all these diverse
Homo erectus fossils surge between 900-1100 cc. These figures
are within the limits of the contemporary human cranial
capacity.
KNM-WT 15000 or Turkana Child skeleton on the
right, is probably the oldest and the most complete human
fossil ever found. Research made on this fossil which is
said to be 1.6 million year old shows that this belongs
to a 12 year old child who would become around 1.80 m. tall
if he reached adolescence. This fossil which very much resembled
to the Neanderthal race, is one of the most remarkable evidence
invalidating the story of human's evolution.
The evolutionist Donald Johnson describes this
fossil as follows: "He was tall and skinny. His body shape
and the proportion of his limbs were the same as the current
Equator Africans. The sizes of his limbs totally matched
with that of the current white North American adults."
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Let us first examine Homo erectus, which is referred to as the
most primitive human species. As the name implies, "Homo erectus"
means "man who walks upright". Evolutionists have had to separate
these fossils from earlier ones by adding the qualification of "erectness",
because all the available Homo erectus fossils are straight to an
extent not observed in any of the australopithecines or so-called
Homo habilis specimens. There is no difference between the postcranial
skeleton of modern man and that of Homo erectus.
The primary reason for evolutionists' defining Homo erectus as
"primitive", is the cranial capacity of its skull (900-1,100 cc),
which is smaller than the average modern man, and its thick eyebrow
projections. However, there are many people living today in the
world who have the same cranial capacity as Homo erectus (pygmies,
for instance) and other races have protruding eyebrows (Native Australians,
for insance).
It is a commonly agreed-upon fact that differences
in cranial capacity do not necessarily denote differences in intelligence
or abilities. Intelligence depends on the internal organisation
of the brain, rather than on its volume.80
The fossils that have made Homo erectus known to the entire world
are those of Peking man and Java man in Asia. However, in time it
was realised that these two fossils are not reliable. Peking Man
consists of some elements made of plaster whose originals have been
lost, and Java Man is "composed" of a skull fragment plus a pelvic
bone that was found metres away from it with no indication that
these belonged to the same creature. This is why the Homo erectus
fossils found in Africa have gained such increasing importance.
(It should also be noted that some of the fossils said to be Homo
erectus were included under a second species named "Homo ergaster"
by some evolutionists. There is disagreement among the experts on
this issue. We will treat all these fossils under the classification
of Homo erectus)
The most famous of the Homo erectus specimens
found in Africa is the fossil of "Narikotome Homo erectus" or the
"Turkana Boy" which was found near Lake Turkana in Kenya. It is
confirmed that the fossil was that of a 12-year-old boy, who would
have been 1.83 meters tall in adolescence. The upright skeletal
structure of the fossil is no different from that of modern man.
The American paleoanthropologist Alan Walker said that he doubted
that "the average pathologist could tell the difference between
the fossil skeleton and that of a modern human."81
Concerning the skull, Walker said that "it looked so much like
a Neanderthal."82 As we will see in the next
chapter, Neanderthals are a modern human race. Therefore, Homo erectus
is also a modern human race.
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700 Thousand
Year Old Mariners
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| "Early
humans were much smarter than we suspected..."
News published in New Scientist on March 14th
1998 tells us that the humans called Homo Erectus by evolutionists
were practicing seamanship 700 thousand years ago. These humans,
who had enough knowledge and technology to build a vessel
and possess a culture that made use of sea transport, can
hardly be called "primitive". |
Even the evolutionist Richard Leakey states that the differences
between Homo erectus and modern man are no more than racial variance:
One would also see differences
in the shape of the skull, in the degree of protrusion of the
face, the robustness of the brows and so on. These differences
are probably no more pronounced than we see today between the
separate geographical races of modern humans. Such biological
variation arises when populations are geographically separated
from each other for significant lengths of time.83
Professor William Laughlin from the University of Connecticut made
extensive anatomical examinations of Inuits and the people living
on the Aleut islands, and noticed that these people were extraordinarily
similar to Homo erectus. The conclusion Laughlin arrived at was
that all these distinct races were in fact different races of Homo
sapiens (modern man).
When we consider the vast
differences that exist between remote groups such as Eskimos and
Bushmen, who are known to belong to the single species of Homo sapiens,
it seems justifiable to conclude that Sinanthropus [an erectus specimen]
belongs within this same diverse species.84
It is now a more pronounced fact in the scientific community that
Homo erectus is a superfluous taxon, and that fossils assigned to
the Homo erectus class are actually not so different from Homo sapiens
as to be considered a different species. In American Scientist,
the discussions over this issue and the result of a conference held
on the subject in 2000 were summarised in this way:
Most of the participants
at the Senckenberg conference got drawn into a flaming debate
over the taxonomic status of Homo erectus started by Milford Wolpoff
of the University of Michigan, Alan Thorne of the University of
Canberra and their colleagues. They argued forcefully that Homo
erectus had no validity as a species and should be eliminated
altogether. All members of the genus Homo, from about 2 million
years ago to the present, were one highly variable, widely spread
species, Homo sapiens, with no natural breaks or subdivisions.
The subject of the conference, Homo erectus didn't exist.85
The conclusion reached by the scientists defending the abovementioned
thesis can be summarised as "Homo erectus is not a different species
from Homo sapiens, but rather a race within Homo sapiens".
On the other hand, there is a huge gap between Homo erectus,
a human race, and the apes that preceded Homo erectus in
the "human evolution" scenario, (Australopithecus, Homo
Habilis, and Homo rudolfensis). This means that the
first men appeared in the fossil record suddenly and without any
prior evolutionary history. This is a most clear indication of
their being created.
Yet, admitting this fact is totally against the dogmatic philosophy
and ideology of evolutionists. As a result, they try to portray
Homo erectus, a truly human race, as a half-ape creature. In their
Homo erectus reconstructions, they tenaciously draw simian features.
On the other hand, with similar drawing methods, they humanise apes
like Australopithecus or Homo Habilis. With this method, they seek
to "approximate" apes and human beings and close the gap between
these two distinct living classes.
Neanderthals
FALSE MASKS
Although no different from modern man, Neanderthals are still
depicted as ape-like by evolutionists. |
Neanderthals were human beings who suddenly appeared 100,000 years
ago in Europe, and who disappeared, or were assimilated by mixing
with other races, quietly but quickly 35,000 years ago. Their only
difference from modern man is that their skeletons are more robust
and their cranial capacity slightly bigger.
Neanderthals were a human race, a fact which is admitted by almost
everybody today. Evolutionists have tried very hard to present them
as a "primitive species", yet all the findings indicate that they
were no different from a "robust" man walking on the street today.
A prominent authority on the subject, Erik Trinkaus, a paleoanthropologist
from New Mexico University writes:
Detailed comparisons of Neanderthal
skeletal remains with those of modern humans have shown that there
is nothing in Neanderthal anatomy that conclusively indicates locomotor,
manipulative, intellectual, or linguistic abilities inferior to
those of modern humans.86
Many contemporary researchers define Neanderthal man as a sub-species
of modern man and call him "Homo sapiens neandertalensis". The findings
testify that Neanderthals buried their dead, fashioned musical instruments,
and had cultural affinities with the Homo sapiens sapiens living
during the same period. To put it precisely, Neanderthals are a
"robust" human race that simply disappeared in time.
  
75
Tim Bromage, New Scientist, vol 133, 1992, p. 38-41.
76 J. E. Cronin, N. T. Boaz, C. B. Stringer, Y.
Rak, "Tempo and Mode in Hominid Evolution", Nature, Vol 292, 1981,
p. 113-122.
77 C. L. Brace, H. Nelson, N. Korn, M. L. Brace,
Atlas of Human Evolution, 2.b. New York: Rinehart and Wilson, 1979.
78 Alan Walker, Scientific American, vol 239 (2),
1978, p. 54.
79 Bernard Wood, Mark Collard, "The Human
Genus", Science, vol 284, No 5411, 2 April 1999, p. 65-71.
80 Marvin Lubenow, Bones of Contention, Grand Rapids,
Baker, 1992, p. 83.
81 Boyce Rensberger, The Washington Post, November
19, 1984.
82 Ibid.
83 Richard Leakey, The Making of Mankind, London:
Sphere Books, 1981, p. 62.
84 Marvin Lubenow, Bones of Contention, Grand Rapids,
Baker, 1992. p. 136.
85 Pat Shipman, "Doubting Dmanisi", American
Scientist, November- December 2000, p. 491.
86 Erik Trinkaus, "Hard Times Among the Neanderthals",
Natural History, vol 87, December 1978, p. 10; R. L. Holloway, "The
Neanderthal Brain: What Was Primitive", American Journal of Physical
Anthropology Supplement, Vol 12, 1991, p. 94.
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